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Siberia is a vast belt of North Asia within Russia. It stretches from the Ural Mountains in the west, to the Pacific Ocean in the east, to the Arctic Ocean in the north, to the mountains of north-central Kazakhstan in the southwest, and to China, Mongolia and North Korea in the south, with an area of 12.76 million square kilometers. <
Siberia is a vast belt of North Asia within Russia. It stretches from the Ural Mountains in the west, to the Pacific Ocean in the east, to the Arctic Ocean in the north, to the mountains of north-central Kazakhstan in the southwest, and to China, Mongolia and North Korea in the south, with an area of 12.76 million square kilometers.
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The geographical location of Siberia is as follows: from the Ural Mountains in the west, to Cape Dezhniov in the east, to the Arctic Ocean in the north, to the mountains of north-central Kazakhstan in the southwest, and to Mongolia and the Trans-Khingan Mountains in the south. According to the topography, Siberia can be divided into:
The West Siberian Plain, the Central Siberian Plateau, the Eastern Siberian Mountains.
Siberia is a vast area of North Asia in Russia, all but the southwestern tip of Russia. Siberia is more of a figurative regional scope than a geographical term. The entire east of the Ural Mountains, in the northern part of the entire Asian continent, is often called Siberia by many people, especially foreigners.
Geographical features of Siberia
1) Extreme continental climate. Winters are long and bitterly cold, and summers are short and warm. Extremely cold and long winters limit the growth of broad-leaved forests, so there is a lack of mixed and broad-leaved forests in Siberia.
2) The permafrost is widely distributed, it occupies almost three-quarters of the area of Siberia. The presence of permafrost also influences the formation of many other features of Siberian nature. For example, in hydrology, permafrost forms an aquifer and a provider of water in summer; On the soil, due to the presence of permafrost, it causes the swamping of the soil in areas that are excessively wet; In addition, from the perspective of the animal kingdom, permafrost has become an insurmountable obstacle for digging animals.
3) The zonal natural zone is particularly typical, and the arctic ice sheet, tundra belt and subarctic coniferous forest belt are all natural zones in the world. There are intermittent forest-steppes and grasslands on the southern edge of North Asia, which is a transition zone to the southern geographical region. The dominant factor in the formation of the geographical environment structure of North Asia is the climate that reflects the zonal factors, and its gradual change from north to south is the fundamental reason for the formation of the zonal natural belt.
Of course, in North Asia, where latitudinal zonality is dominant, there are also great differences between east and west due to the influence of non-zonal factors.
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Siberia (Russian: English: Siberia) is a vast area in North Asia, from the Ural Mountains in the west, to Cape Dezhniov in the east, to the Arctic Ocean in the north, to the mountains of north-central Kazakhstan in the southwest, to Mongolia and the Khingan Mountains in the south, with an area of about 13.22 million square kilometers.
Siberia can be divided into three parts according to the topography: the West Siberian Plain, the Central Siberian Plateau, and the East Siberian Mountains.
The name Siberia probably comes from the Siberian Tatar language, meaning "sleeping place" (sib ir). The Siberian Tatars used this as the name of the state to establish the Siberian Khanate, which was later conquered by the Grand Duchy of Moscow, and the term Siberia entered the Russian language. It is also said to be "Xianbeilia", which comes from Xianbei.
There is also an explanation that Siberia was interpreted as the place of Siban because his fief was located in Siberia. It is also said that Tsarist Russia created a new place name in North Asia after the Xibe ethnic name. And on ancient Chinese maps, Siberia is known as the Luo Wilderness.
Siberia is rich in resources, and the West Siberian Plain is the breadbasket of Russia.
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Siberia is divided into three major topographic regions, namely the West Siberian Plain, the Central Siberian Plateau, and the East Siberian Mountains.
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Siberia is a general term for the territory of the Asian part of Russia.
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Siberia (Russian: is a very large area of Russia and northern Kazakhstan, covering the whole of North Asia, covering an area of about 13.1 million square kilometers. The range of Siberia extends to the Ural Mountains in the west and the Pacific Ocean in the east; It stretches from the Arctic Ocean to the north-central part of Kazakhstan in the north, and the border between Mongolia and China.
The entire territory belongs to the Russian Federation, with the exception of the southwestern part of Kazakhstan, which occupies 75 of its territory. The name "Siberia" probably comes from an Old Turkic word meaning "land of tranquility". The Siberian Tatars established the Siberian Khanate under this name, which was later conquered by the Grand Duchy of Moscow, and "Siberia" entered the Russian language.
It is also said that it is "Xianbeilia", which comes from the Xianbei people. There is another explanation that Siberia is interpreted as the place of the former ban, because his fief was indeed in Siberia. One is that Tsarist Russia created a new place name in North Asia with the ethnic name of the Xibe people:
Siberia". On ancient Chinese maps, Siberia is called "Luo Wilderness", which may mean "the wilderness of the Rakshasa Kingdom (the ancient name of Russia)". Siberia is a vast territory that can be divided into 3 main regions according to natural conditions:
The west is the West Siberian Plain, between the Ural Mountains and the Yenisei River, the central part is the Central Siberian Plateau, from the Putolana Mountains in the northwest corner of the Yenisei River in the west to the Dalena River basin in the east. Siberia is located in the middle and high latitudes, with a significant continental climate, which gradually strengthens from west to east, with long and cold winters and mild and short summers. The average annual temperature is below 0.
The absolute low temperature in the northeastern Yakutia region is 70. The spatial and temporal differences of precipitation are obvious. Precipitation in 75 80 is mainly concentrated in the summer months.
The vegetation includes tundra, forest swamps, taiga coniferous forests, forest steppes and treeless steppes. Siberia is rich in natural resources, including oil, natural gas, coal, gold, diamond, etc., and the distribution of various resources is relatively concentrated, and there are many large mineral deposits. Siberia is the habitat of nomads.
Beginning in the second half of the 16th century, Tsarist Russia expanded beyond the Ural Mountains into Siberia and ceded large swaths of territory that had previously belonged to China. 1895 After the construction of the Trans-Siberian Railway in 1905, large-scale development of the region began, and the population, mainly ethnic Russians, moved eastward in large numbers.
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The geographical location of Siberia is as follows: from the Ural Mountains in the west, to Cape Dezhny in the east, to the Arctic Ocean in the north, and to Kazakhstan in the southwest.
Rongtan is mountainous in the north-central part of the country, south to Mongolia and the Outer Khingan Mountains;
Siberia is a vast area in North Asia, from the Ural Mountains in the west, to Cape Dezhniov in the east, to the Arctic Ocean in the north, to the mountains of north-central Kazakhstan in the southwest, to Mongolia and the Trans-Khingan Mountains in the south, with an area of about 13.22 million square kilometers, with dialects of Russian, Altaic languages, and Yenisei languages;
Siberia is overwhelmingly controlled by Russia, but there is a small area in the southwest in Kazakhstan. Siberia can be divided into three parts according to the topography: the West Siberian Plain, the Central Siberian Plateau, and the East Siberian Mountains.
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Prevent the interference of foreign organisms and miscellaneous bacteria, and ensure the reliability and accuracy of the experiment. In addition, it is more important to protect oneself and others, so that people and the environment are protected from pathogenic microorganisms.
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Siberia is a vast area of North Asia within Russia. It stretches from the Ural Mountains in the west, reaches the Taiping Huiyang in the east, borders the Beida Ice Ocean in the north, reaches the mountains of north-central Kazakhstan in the southwest, and is adjacent to China, Mongolia and North Korea in the south, covering an area of 12.76 million square kilometers, except for the southwest, all in Russia. The watershed between the Arctic Ocean and the Pacific Ocean is also regarded as its eastern boundary.
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